CABARET VOLTAIRE
'The Original Sound of Sheffield - 78 / 82 - Best Of'
 Released 21st October 2002

The Grey Area of Mute is set to release the best of Cabaret Voltaire, 'The
Original Sound of Sheffield - 78 / 82 - Best Of', bringing together 14 rare,
single and album tracks from 1978 to 1982, undoubtedly  the Cabs finest
period, on the 21st of October 2002.

The album release coincides with novamute's re - release of Cabaret
Voltaire's electro punk classic 'Nag Nag Nag', featuring the original
version together with brand new mixes by Tiga & Zyntherius, Akufen and Cabs
founder member Richard H Kirk, on the 7th of October.

Cabaret Voltaire, who alongside Human League, Throbbing Gristle, Fad Gadget
and The Normal, were at the forefront of the UK Electronic Movement of the
late 70s and are one of the most truly influential and innovative acts of
the last twenty five years.

Initially a three piece, Richard H. Kirk, Stephen Mallinder and Chris Watson
began by playing around with recorded sounds manipulated by basic
reel-to-reel tape recorders in Sheffield in 1973. Way ahead of their time,
these ideas cumulated in 1975, when the three staged their first performance
of these sound experiments and assumed the name Cabaret Voltaire, taken from
the name of the club started in Zurich by the principals of the Dada art
movement during the First World War. As part of the confrontational energy
of punk, itself inspired by the Dada and Situationist art movements, the
early titles of the records didn't mince words - 'Baader Meinhof' and 'Do
The Mussolini (Headkick)' were indicators that were bound to lead to a
certain notoriety. To the press they appeared to be immersed in a world of
paranoia fed by conspiracy theories, political control and the use of drugs
to both liberate and inhibit the individual.

The band began working with Rough Trade in 1978, producing a string of
brilliant singles and the now seminal triumvirate of albums "Mix Up" (1979),
"Voice of America" (1980) and their most prophetic album "Red Mecca" (1981).
Cabaret Voltaire's rare but much anticipated live performances, with their
innovative use of film and video, were documented on the three live albums,
"Live at the YMCA" (1979), "Live at the Lyceum" (1981) and "HAI" live in
Japan (1982), and the 90 minute video "Doublevision presents...." (1982).
Chris Watson left the group in October 1981, but Kirk and Mallinder went on
to record further great albums throughout the Eighties, having a huge
influence on the developing House and Techno scenes in both America and
Europe. Cabaret Voltaire were instrumental in defining a strand of popular
music which became known as experimental or "industrial", whose
practitioners Cabaret Voltaire moved on to leave far behind them and they
continue to be a major inspiration to this day.

The Grey Area are re - issuing the entire Cabaret Voltaire back catalogue
from '78 - '82 to coincide with the best of release and next year will
release a Cabs DVD and a CD box set of previously un - released tracks.



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